Close Menu
  • Home
  • Life Insurance
  • Auto Insurance
  • Home Insurance
  • Health Insurance
  • Business Insurance
  • Travel Insurance
  • Specialized Insurance
  • Insurance Tips & Guides
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Insure GenZInsure GenZ Thursday, May 21
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Life Insurance
  • Auto Insurance
  • Home Insurance
  • Health Insurance
  • Business Insurance
  • Travel Insurance
  • Specialized Insurance
  • Insurance Tips & Guides
Insure GenZInsure GenZ
Home»Travel Insurance»Insurers Cautiously Navigate the Next Step in AI Adoption
Travel Insurance

Insurers Cautiously Navigate the Next Step in AI Adoption

AwaisBy AwaisMay 21, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read1 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Copy Link Email
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
Insurers Cautiously Navigate the Next Step in AI Adoption
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

As more and more companies embed AI into select functions, only a portion indicate that they have used AI to change how an overall enterprise runs.

It illustrates one of the key takeaways drawn from a recent industry survey by AM Best on AI use – measuring the gap between basic, preliminary adoption and measuring transformational outcomes. Nearly 60% of respondents expect AI to significantly transform their business model within the next one to three years.

But approximately just one in five say that their AI implementation is already at an advanced stage. Approximately 150 rated carriers and managing general agents responded to the survey questions posed in November 2025. Results show that companies are increasing their investment in AI to boost productivity, streamline processes, and gain competitive advantage amongst their peers. Unsurprisingly, insurers have identified themselves as risk averse and less advanced than other industries in technology.

The ambition is clearly there, but the realized value is still uneven. In other words, the technology may be maturing faster than the operating models around it. This execution reality was reflected in the survey as 53% of respondents described themselves as cautious pacesetters rather than first movers.

This approach makes sense for a regulated and legacy-heavy industry with a fiduciary duty to its policyholders. Scaling AI here requires more than just the tools. It requires data readiness, workflow redesign, governance, privacy and security controls, vendor oversight, and clear accountability for how AI-supported decisions are made.

(Editor’s note: The survey-based graphics in this article are sourced from AM Best’s report titled “Artificial Intelligence Appears to Be Ready, But Most Insurers Are Not,” which was published on April 27.)

Friction remains for insurers with survey respondents indicating that the top challenges are data readiness (45%), security and privacy (43%), and legacy system integration (41%). (See Exhibit 3). Those shouldn’t necessarily be viewed as three separate and individual problems. These should be considered different manifestations, if of the same underlying issue, which is whether the enterprise data and system environment is mature enough to support AI safely and at scale.

According to survey respondents, live use of AI is most evident in areas such as IT/developer productivity, administrative operations, underwriting, and claims. AI tools have really helped enable insurers to automate many administrative and operational tasks, such as data entry and document manipulation.

AI tools, including machine learning and potentially more agentic systems as they mature, can support underwriting by analyzing large data sets and helping segment submissions by risk characteristics. Lower-complexity risks may be automated or triaged for lighter review, while underwriters can focus more attention on complex cases requiring judgment.

Insurance companies have enormous amounts of data, but that is often spread across older systems and fragmented workflows. AI can generate a lot of value from that data, but only if it is clean, connected, well-governed, and perhaps more importantly — usable.

Perhaps a more cautionary note, only 18% of respondents considered third-party model risk as a challenge. That’s a bit challenging to square with 68% of respondents indicating that third-party solutions are one of the sources of their AI development.

In a regulated industry where insurers remain accountable for the AI that that their vendors deploy, one might have expected that risk to sit a little bit higher. Our expectation is that this issue may move higher on risk radars as adoption matures and as supervisory focus on vendor oversight continues to increase.

A return on investment can be difficult to measure at the early stages of implementation. Some of the technology being utilized is still relatively new and cost benefits will likely take years to materialize. Only 13% of survey respondents felt very confident in their organization’s ability to accurately develop an AI ROI measurement.

What we’re seeing though is improvement in workforce productivity and satisfaction has seen the biggest impact with 63% of respondents reporting a small improvement in addition to another 11% reporting a significant improvement. There’s also been a prominent improvement in efficiency regarding improved expense ratio and automation as 49% of respondents noted a small improvement and 10% noted a significant improvement.

For insurers, AI readiness is not a one-time milestone. It is a moving target that will require governance, data infrastructure, workforce capabilities, and risk controls that can evolve as quickly as the technology itself.

Topics
InsurTech
Data Driven
Artificial Intelligence
Carriers

Interested in Ai?

Get automatic alerts for this topic.

Adoption Cautiously Insurers navigate step
Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email Copy Link
Awais
  • Website

Related Posts

Trump to Sign Order on AI Oversight as Security Fears Mount Among Supporters

May 21, 2026

Jury Sides With Insurers, Finding Takeda Liable for $885M in Damages

May 21, 2026

New Mexico Politicians Grapple With Oil Windfall From Iran War That’s ‘Awesome’ And Awkward

May 21, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Our Latest Blogs

ICE Arrests Are Separating Families. Here’s How To Plan Ahead.

May 21, 2026

War Overtakes Civil Unrest as Top Political Violence Exposure for Global Businesses

May 21, 2026

ILS / non-traditional capital a “critical extension” of traditional reinsurance: Bolding, Gallagher Securities

May 21, 2026

Trump to Sign Order on AI Oversight as Security Fears Mount Among Supporters

May 21, 2026
Recent Posts
  • ICE Arrests Are Separating Families. Here’s How To Plan Ahead.
  • War Overtakes Civil Unrest as Top Political Violence Exposure for Global Businesses
  • ILS / non-traditional capital a “critical extension” of traditional reinsurance: Bolding, Gallagher Securities
  • Trump to Sign Order on AI Oversight as Security Fears Mount Among Supporters
  • Maine High Court Upholds Claims Settlement, Case Dismissal Over Insured’s Objection

Subscribe to Updates

Insure Genz is a modern insurance blog built for the next generation. Subscribe it for more updates.

Insure Genz is a modern insurance blog built for the next generation. We break down complex topics across categories like Auto, Health, Business, Life, and Travel Insurance — making them simple, useful, and easy to understand. Whether you're just getting started or looking for expert tips and guides, we've got you covered with clear, reliable content.

Our Picks

ICE Arrests Are Separating Families. Here’s How To Plan Ahead.

May 21, 2026

War Overtakes Civil Unrest as Top Political Violence Exposure for Global Businesses

May 21, 2026

ILS / non-traditional capital a “critical extension” of traditional reinsurance: Bolding, Gallagher Securities

May 21, 2026

Trump to Sign Order on AI Oversight as Security Fears Mount Among Supporters

May 21, 2026
Most Popular

ICE Arrests Are Separating Families. Here’s How To Plan Ahead.

May 21, 2026

War Overtakes Civil Unrest as Top Political Violence Exposure for Global Businesses

May 21, 2026

ILS / non-traditional capital a “critical extension” of traditional reinsurance: Bolding, Gallagher Securities

May 21, 2026

Trump to Sign Order on AI Oversight as Security Fears Mount Among Supporters

May 21, 2026
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
© 2026 Insure GenZ. Designed by Insure GenZ.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.